RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,471 results for "Truth and Reconciliation Commission" — page 62 of 124
ZF_5_13 — Coral Paleontology: Fossil Reefs and Ancient Reef Ecosystems
Reef ecosystems have existed for over 3.5 billion years — beginning with Archean microbial stromatolite mounds — making them among the longest-running biological communities on Earth. Yet the organisms that build reefs h
ZF_5_04 — Aquaculture: Fish Farming, Mariculture, and Blue Revolution
Aquaculture — the farming of aquatic organisms including fish, shellfish, crustaceans, and seaweed — has become the fastest-growing food production sector in the world and now provides more seafood for human consumption
ZF_5_09 — Whale Falls: Deep-Sea Decomposition and Chemosynthetic Ecosystems
Whale falls — the carcasses of large cetaceans that sink to the deep ocean floor — are among the most remarkable ecosystems in the sea, transforming the nutrient-poor desert of the abyssal plains into oases of biological
ZF_5_07 — Upwelling Systems: Coastal Productivity and Fisheries Foundations
Upwelling — the wind-driven or current-driven ascent of cold, nutrient-rich deep water to the sunlit surface layer — is the foundation of the ocean's most productive ecosystems and the world's most valuable fisheries. Th
ZF_5_11 — Abyssal Plains: Earth's Flattest Terrain and Deep Sedimentation
Abyssal plains — vast, flat expanses of sea floor at depths of 3,000–6,000 meters — are the largest habitat on Earth, covering approximately 54% of the planet's surface (more than all continents combined), yet they remai
ZF_5_22 — Cetacean Cognition: Marine Mammal Intelligence and Problem-Solving
Cetaceans (whales, dolphins, porpoises) display a suite of cognitive capacities that meet or exceed those of great apes on multiple comparative measures, despite an evolutionary lineage independent from primate cognition
ZF_5_05 — UNCLOS and Ocean Governance: Maritime Law, EEZ, and High Seas
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entering into force in 1994, is the comprehensive legal framework governing all uses of the world's oceans — often called the "Constitutio
ZF_5_06 — Ocean Energy: Tidal Power, Wave Energy, and OTEC
Ocean energy encompasses a family of renewable energy technologies that harvest the ocean's vast stores of kinetic, thermal, and chemical energy — including tidal power (predictable tidal flow and range), wave energy (wi
ZF_5_17 — Oil Spill Ecotoxicology: Environmental Fate, Biological Effects, and Ecosystem Recovery
Oil spills — the release of petroleum hydrocarbons into marine and coastal environments — represent among the most visible and ecologically damaging forms of anthropogenic pollution, triggering toxic effects across multi
ZF_4_11 — Sea Ice Dynamics and Polar Oceanography
Sea ice — frozen seawater that forms a thin crust (typically 1–4 m thick) over polar and subpolar oceans — is one of Earth's most dynamic and climate-sensitive features, playing a disproportionate role in global climate
ZF_4_13 — Ocean Noise Pollution: Anthropogenic Sound and Marine Life
Ocean noise pollution — the introduction of excessive or harmful human-generated sound into the marine environment — has emerged as one of the most pervasive and least visible threats to marine ecosystems. Sound travels
ZF_4_03 — Desalination and Ocean Water Resources
Desalination — the removal of dissolved salts from seawater or brackish water to produce freshwater — has become an increasingly critical technology as global freshwater demand rises and climate change intensifies drough
ZF_4_02 — Ocean Pollution and Plastic Debris
Ocean pollution encompasses the introduction of harmful substances and materials into the marine environment, degrading water quality, damaging ecosystems, and threatening human health. The major categories are: plastic
ZF_4_06 — Ocean Remote Sensing and Satellite Oceanography
Satellite oceanography — the use of Earth-orbiting sensors to observe ocean properties from space — has transformed ocean science since the 1970s from a data-sparse field reliant on sparse ship transects to a globally co
ZF_4_07 — Deep Ocean Mining and Mineral Resources
Deep-sea mining — the extraction of mineral resources from the ocean floor at depths of 200–6,000 m — is one of the most consequential and contested environmental issues in contemporary oceanography. Three primary resour
ZF_4_16 — Microplastics in the Ocean: Sources, Pathways, and Ecological Impact
Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean. First systematically described as a marine pollutant by Richard Thomp
ZF_4_15 — Ocean Sediments: Deep-Sea Cores, Proxy Records, and Paleoclimate
Ocean sediments are the Earth's most comprehensive climate archive — a continuous record of planetary conditions extending back over 200 million years, slowly accumulated grain by grain on the deep seafloor at rates of m
ZF_4_12 — Underwater Acoustics and the SOFAR Channel
Sound is the dominant long-range information carrier in the ocean — electromagnetic radiation (light, radio) is rapidly absorbed in seawater, but sound can travel thousands of kilometers with remarkably little loss, maki
ZF_4_05 — Marine Pharmacology and Drug Discovery
Marine pharmacology explores the ocean's vast biodiversity as a source of bioactive compounds for drug development — a field that has yielded several approved drugs and thousands of promising leads since the pioneering w
ZF_4_04 — Ocean Acoustics and Sound Channels
Ocean acoustics — the study of sound propagation in the sea — is fundamental to marine science, military applications, and understanding marine life. Sound travels approximately 4.5× faster in seawater (~1,500 m/s) than
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